New Delhi: As 2021 comes to an end, the future of Indo-China relations hangs in uncertainty. The situation is expected to crumble further as China's new border law titled the ‘Land Border Law of the People’s Republic of China' comes into effect on 1 January 2022.
The law, which China passed earlier in the year, aims to strengthen border control, gives immense power to People's Liberation Army (PLA) to build huge infrastructures in the bordering villages of countries that share a land border with China. This would add more complications for India’s ongoing tensions with it along the Line of Actual Control (LAC).
Adding to woes, China on Thursday ‘renamed’ 15 places including residential areas, mountains, rivers and a mountain pass situated in Arunachal Pradesh, which China claims as its own territory called ‘South Tibet’. New Delhi had denounced the claims several times by saying 'Arunachal Pradesh was, is and will remain an integral part of India.
In an exclusive interview with ETV Bharat, war veteran and defense expert Major General (Retired) Dr GD Bakshi, said, "China's new border law was in response to China's perceived notion of getting into a situation of Laicization of the LAC, which it think would would destabilise us and can get away. But India has responded firmly, first in Bhutan; then in Sikhim; and now in Ladakh to match with the Chinese tank for tank, gun for gun, soldier for a soldier."
Bakshi, who has had served the Indian Army in various combat missions in Kashmir, also dismissed Chinese hostilities as cosmetic gestures to put India under pressure. However, he said that in today's uncertain environment, the possibility of any kind of conflict cannot be ruled out.
When asked whether the possibility of peace is bleak as China is engaged in a direct confrontation along LAC, Major Bakshi replied, "They have this huge manpower problem. That is why they're trying to make up border villages, Artificial Intelligence and Robots, etc.. All these jokes are fine but in mountains, robots do not work."
He added, "China may be the most populous nation in the world, but it is a ageing population. But, ours is the youngest population in the world, so China cannot match up in the strength of the army any longer."